Never considered this, it sounds quite reasonable to me.
Never considered this, it sounds quite reasonable to me.
I am often pleasantly surprised when I mix the last of the current bag with some of the next new bag.
USA needs universal healthcare first
Asteroids
I’m really surprised Georgia is not darker red.
Gonna need a really good “Go Fund Me”
I use a 7 stage 3M set up. No idea whether this is affordable or not in your region. Here in SE Asia it was a reasonable price.
Blade grinders make boulders and dust. Save it for chopping herbs or something. Get a Timemore or Kingrinder hand grinder for just over $50 on Amazon. They aren’t the best but they are far better than what you have.
A good grinder is arguably the most important piece of gear in your coffee making set up.
Like others have said, your biggest problem right now is the grinder. A blade grinder makes boulders and dust. There is no way to get good even extraction from that. There are decent hand grinders from Timemore and Kingrinder starting at $50+ and decent electric grinders from Baratza and Fellow from around $150. These would cover all of the non-espresso grinding needs. Espresso grinding will cost you a little more.
As far as good budget espresso machines go, Lance Hedrick posted this as the new budget choice:
I used to have tons of problems with it but for the last 6 months or year it seems to be working fairly well for me.
I see it for sale on Shopee in VN for around $150. Looks ok. Personally I’d spend another $50 and get the Fellow Opus if I wanted an electrical conical that can do espresso and non-espresso grinds. The Baratza Encore ESP would also be a good choice.
The first time I played Scrabble was with an old university friend and his wife. They both fancied themselves expert Scrabble players. Both bright and talented folks and lovely people. I won the game and the last word I played was DILDO.
I have never again played Scrabble again since I figured I could never top that. Also they never asked me to play with them again either.
the libertarian pipe dream
I love my Clever Dripper immersion brewer. Great device for the money.
I have used a blade grinder, the Hario Skerton hand grinder (cursed - avoid at all costs), the Knock Feld2 (quite good at the time it came out but beaten by less expensive alternatives now), the Helor 101 (same comment as Feld2), the electric Fellow Opus (quite good for the price but not perfect) and the Fellow Ode Gen 2.
I use the Fellow Opus at the office with a Clever Dripper immersion brewer and it is very good for that purpose. It was not so great for the V60 at home because it produces a fair amount of fines. It was ok for the V60 but the Fellow Ode Gen 2 is fantastic in comparison when used with the V60. The Ode Gen 2 produces very few fines and an incredibly consistent grind. I was frankly blown away by the improvement from the Opus to the Ode Gen 2 on the V60. The Opus is also a very visible step up from the Feld2 and Helor 101 when used with the Clever Dripper.
For drip coffee I cannot over recommend the Fellow Ode Gen 2. It is a great grinder and well worth the price.
One big negative, is that it won’t do espresso grind.
I would happily consider the Fellow Opus as a well priced all around choice for espresso, moka pot, and drip.
At home I have a Fellow Ode Gen 2 which I use with a V60 brewer. At the office I have a Fellow Opus (a decent entry level conical grinder) which I use with a Clever Dripper (an immersion release brewer).
My old hand grinders are the Helor 101 and the Knock Feld2.
Back up cameras and 360 parking detection sensors. Heated and cooled seats. Android Auto with integrated Google Maps. New cars are so much better than my old beater.
Getting nice in-ear monitors with replaceable cables is so much better than wireless for me. Great sound quality and they weak link that always breaks (the wires) is now no longer an issue. I’ve had the same IEM now for 10 years and just change the cables every couple of years.
Higher quality electric coffee grinders. I have been using pretty nice hand grinders for years ($100 to $200 range) and while they were good, the consistency and general quality of life improvement gotten from these nicer electric grinders has made a significant improvement in both the coffee quality and my time/life quality related to making coffee daily.
Title is quite disingenuous. Doesn’t match content.